The Moosepath League
The Moosepath League Saga is a series of historical novels by Van Reid. Set in the State of Maine in the late 19th century, they are on the surface comic novels, but contain strong elements of adventure, mystery, romance, and the occasional brushes with the supernatural. Reid has drawn on history, 19th century literature and newspaper stories, folk-lore, and old family stories for his settings, characters, and themes. The first book in the series was picked as a New York Times Notable Book of 1998.
The Moosepath Saga
Title | Publication Date | Major Time Setting | ISBN |
Cordelia Underwood, or the Marvelous Beginnings of the Moosepath League | 1998 | July, 1896 | 978-1-60893-518-5 |
Mollie Peer, or the Underground Adventure of the Moosepath League | 1999 | October, 1896 | 978-1-60893-520-8 |
Daniel Plainway, or the Holiday Haunting of the Moosepath League | 2000 | December, 1896 | 978-1-60893-522-2 |
Mrs. Roberto, or the Widowy Worries of the Moosepath League | 2003 | May, 1897 | 978-1-60893-524-6 |
Fiddler's Green, or a Wedding, a Ball, and the Singular Adventures of Sundry Moss | 2004 | June, 1897 | 978-1-60893-526-0 |
Moss Farm, or the Mysterious Missives of the Moosepath League | 2012 | September, 1896 | 978-1-60893-528-4 |
The first book in the series was initially published in serial form in the Lincoln County Weekly, Damariscotta, Maine under the title The Moosepath League, running from April, 1995 to June, 1997. Originally published by The Viking Press/Penguin Books, the Moosepath saga, as well as Peter Loon are currently being published by Down East Books, a subsidiary of the Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group. New editions of the first two books include some new material — in each case, short passages left out of the original editions.
Reid, purportedly, is working on the seventh and eight volumes.
Not listed above is Reid's fourth published novel Peter Loon. This book is not ostensibly part of the Moosepath Saga, but many readers suspected it to be somehow connected to the series. Reid's seventh novel Moss Farm answered those suspicions by making the connections explicit.
Main characters
The series follows the adventures and misadventures of five men, who form the titular gentleman’s club. The founding members of the Moosepath League are:- Mr. Joseph Thump — who first suggests the idea of forming a club while having dinner with his two friends;
- Mr. Christopher Eagleton;
- Mr. Matthew Ephram;
- Mister Tobias Walton — the league’s chairman ;
- Mr. Sundry Moss — “gentleman’s gentleman” and assistant to Mister Walton
Author Van Reid says that the names of the characters Ephram, Eagleton and Thump were chosen to evoke the sound of a heavy object falling downstairs. The name Tobias was consciously borrowed from the character of Uncle Toby in Laurence Sterne’s The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman; Walton from Izaak Walton, author of The Compleat Angler.
Ephram, Eagleton, and Thump adhere to different political parties, go to separate churches, subscribe to different newspapers, and are fascinated/obsessed with three distinct aspects of daily life – the time, the weather, and the tides, respectively.
While Pickwickian on the surface, Mister Walton is a more worldly personality than the aforementioned characters.
Sundry Moss is the only non-Portland native in the Moosepath League's original roster, as well as an athletic and quick-thinking man of the countryside.
Other recurring characters:
- Phileda McCannon — an attractive middle-aged woman who captures the attention and heart of Mister Walton;
- Horace McQuinn — a rascally fixture on the Portland Waterfront, whose apparent connections to less than legal activities and wry appreciation of the more innocent members of the Moosepath League occasionally make him a worthy ally;
- Maven Flyce — Horace's perpetually astonished and childlike friend;
- Charles Piper — Sheriff of Lincoln County;
- Colonel Roderick Taverner — United States customs agent
- The Underwood family — Leading figures of the first book in the series, they continue to be a presence of varying degree throughout the first six volumes.
- Priscilla Morningside — A cousin to Cordelia Underwood, the painfully shy Priscilla has captured the heart of Sundry Moss
Timeframes
Peter Loon, now known to have real continuity with the Moosepath Saga, largely takes place in October 1801.
Settings
The first six books in the Moosepath Saga take place entirely in the State of Maine, with the main body of each volume beginning in the City of Portland. As each book progresses, the characters’ adventures lead them to other Maine cities and towns such as Bangor, Bath, Brunswick, Wiscasset, Edgecomb, Freeport, South Freeport, Richmond, Dresden, Bowdoinham, and many more.In recent speaking events, Reid has revealed that the main plot of the next book in the saga will take place largely in Nova Scotia.
With only the occasional exception, Reid’s characters travel real streets, byways, and railway lines, visiting actual houses, businesses, institutions, and landmarks. Many readers have made a game of following the Moosepath League’s circuitous wanderings and visiting those sites open to the public. Some of the most visible and visited sites include The Portland Custom House, Fort Edgecomb, the shell middens on the shores of the Damariscotta River, the old jail in Wiscasset, and various streets, corners, roads, and waterfronts. Geocaching has been reported at some of these sites.
Timeframes and setting
Title | Main Timeframe | Main Locations |
Cordelia Underwood | July 1 – 31, 1896 | Portland , Freeport, South Freeport, Wiscasset, Boothbay Harbor, Damariscotta, Newcastle, Millinocket, Bangor, Ellsworth |
Moss Farm | September 24 – October 1, 1896 | Portland, Edgecomb, Saco |
Mollie Peer | September 24 – Halloween, 1896 | Portland, Bath, Brunswick, Cape Elizabeth, Hallowell, Arrowsic, Wiscasset, Edgecomb |
Daniel Plainway | November 27, 1896 – New Year’s Day, 1897 | Portland, Gilead, Hiram, Augusta, Skowhegan, Wiscasset, Hallowell, Iceboro, Gardiner, Veazie |
Mrs. Roberto | May 7 – June 3, 1897 | Portland, Dresden, Bowdoinham, Iceboro, Orland, Bangor, Head Tide |
Fiddler's Green | June 3 – 16, 1897 | Portland, China, Albion, Jackman Station |